Once restrictions are lifted
September 11, 2012
Philippine carriers expect to significantly expand their China
operations over the next several years and remain confident in the
opportunities in the Chinese market despite a current government warning
on holidaying in the Philippines. Philippine low-cost carriers – including AirAsia Philippines, Cebu Pacific, PAL Express/AirPhil Express and Zest Air – are poised to be the largest beneficiaries from increasing demand in the Philippines-China market.
In recent years an influx in charters has catered to a large portion of the growth in the Philippines-China market. But charters between the two countries have stopped operating in recent months due to a Chinese government warning against travel to the Philippines, an unfortunate politically-motivated byproduct of the dispute over the Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. The return of charter operations and a significant increase in scheduled flights are expected once the warning is lifted.
In recent years an influx in charters has catered to a large portion of the growth in the Philippines-China market. But charters between the two countries have stopped operating in recent months due to a Chinese government warning against travel to the Philippines, an unfortunate politically-motivated byproduct of the dispute over the Scarborough Shoal in the South China Sea. The return of charter operations and a significant increase in scheduled flights are expected once the warning is lifted.
There are currently about 11,000 one-way scheduled seats per week in
the Philippines-China market, down about 15% from May-2012 when China
first issued its warning against travelling to the Philippines following
a naval standoff with the Philippines around the Scarborough Shoal.
Philippine carriers account for nearly three-quarters of capacity in the
market. Philippine Airlines (PAL) is the largest carrier, accounting for 37% of current capacity between the Philippines and China.
Cebu
Pacific is the second largest carrier in the Philippines-China market,
accounting for 27% of total capacity. A second Philippine LCC, Zest Air,
also serves mainland China but only accounts for about 9% of total
capacity in the market. China Southern currently accounts for about 21% of capacity in the Philippines-China market while Air China accounts for the remaining 6%, according to Innovata data.
PAL currently serves Beijing, Shanghai and Xiamen from Manila while Cebu Pacific serves Guangzhou, Beijing, Shanghai and Xiamen (launched in Mar-2012). Zest serves Shanghai and Quanzhou (launched in May-2012, giving Qanzhou Jinjiang Airport its first scheduled international service). From the Chinese side, China Southern serves Manila from Guangzhou and Xiamen while Air China only links Manila from Beijing.
Philippines to China capacity (one-way seats per week) by carrier: 10-Sep-2012 to 16-Sep-2012
Carrier | Routes and weekly seats | Total weekly seats and capacity share |
---|---|---|
Philippine Airlines | Manila-Beijing (750) Manila-Shanghai (2114) Manila-Xiamen (1201) |
4065 (37%) |
Cebu Pacific | Manila-Beijing (716) Manila-Guangzhou (537) Manila-Shanghai (1253) Manila-Xiamen (450) |
2956 (27%) |
China Southern | Manila-Guangzhou (1022) Manila-Xiamen (1253) |
2275 (21%) |
Zest Air | Manila-Quanzhou (504) Manila-Shanghai (504) |
1008 (9%) |
Air China | Manila-Beijing (656) | 656 (6%) |
Philippines-China was a large charter market before Scarborough Shoal conflict
PAL, Zest and Cebu Pacific also operated frequent charters into China
prior to May-2012, when Chinese tour companies cancelled their charter
programmes as a result of the travel warning. Most of the charters
operated to airports near beach resorts (such as Kalibo) rather than
Manila. The warning has also significantly impacted demand and
profitability on scheduled routes, according to executives at Philippine
carriers.
The PAL Group's LCC subsidiary, AirPhil
Express (which later this year will readopt the previous brand PAL
Express), also operated flights to China prior to the onset of the
current crisis in May-2012. PAL Express will likely resume flights to
the country once tensions ease and would be the logical brand for adding
destinations in China that are not served by PAL mainline given
AirPhil/PAL Express’ leisure focus and all-economy configuration.
While Philippine carriers would be interested in increasing capacity
to major Chinese cities, slot and traffic right restrictions will likely
limit any growth in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou to up-gauging
existing flights. Cebu Pacific, for example will be able to more than
double capacity on its Beijing and Shanghai services by switching from Airbus
A320s to Airbus A330s, which it will start taking delivery of in
mid-2013. But the real opportunities are in secondary Chinese cities.
Cebu Pacific CEO advisor Garry Kingshott told CAPA's LCCs & New Age Airlines in North Asia
conference on 06-Sep-2012 that “the opportunities in China and Chinese
secondary cities are enormous. They will sustain many more operations
for years to come as disposable income comes up and they are allowed to
travel.”
Also speaking at the conference, Zest CEO advisor Brian Hogan cited Xian and Chengdu
among the many secondary Chinese destinations which can potentially
support LCC service from the Philippines. “When China opens up oh my
goodness you could put a 1,000 airplanes in and out of there ... there’s
people everywhere. They want to travel,” Mr Hogan said.
AirAsia Philippines seeks China traffic rights
New LCC AirAsia Philippines is also keen on the mainland China market
and has already applied for traffic rights to China. AirAsia
Philippines launched services in Mar-2012 and now operates domestic as
well as international flights to Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong and Macau.
AirAsia Philippines could launch flights to mainland China as early
as 2013, at which point it is hoped that the current travel warning will
no longer be in place. AirAsia Philippines will seek to serve points in
mainland China which are already served by other AirAsia affiliates.
The AirAsia Group now has seven destinations in mainland China – Beijing, Chengdu, Chongqing, Guilin, Guangzhou, Hangzhou and Shenzhen. Guangzhou and Shenzhen are served from both Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok while Beijing, Chengdu, Guilin and Hangzhou are served from Kuala Lumpur and Chongqing is served from Bangkok. Four more mainland China destinations are to be added in the coming months – Nanning, Kunming, Xian and Wuhan.
AirAsia’s large presence in China through its affiliates in Malaysia and Thailand
could give AirAsia Philippines an advantage as Philippines-China
becomes a hot market. AirAsia Philippines will not have to spend as much
to launch and support new services to secondary cities in China as its
competitors because it can leverage the existing services of AirAsia X, AirAsia Malaysia and Thai AirAsia.
Being affiliated with a well known pan-Asian brand will also help
AirAsia Philippines market any new service to Chinese residents, which
would account for the overwhelming majority of passengers on any new
Philippines-China route.
Limited domestic opportunities prompt Philippine LCCs to look towards North Asia
Most Philippine LCCs now see more opportunities in the international
market than domestically given the intense competition and overcapacity
that is plaguing the domestic market. There are currently five LCCs
operating domestically in the Philippines – market leader Cebu Pacific,
AirPhil Express (soon to be rebranded PAL Express), Zest, SEAir and
AirAsia Philippines. SEAir launched a new LCC operation covering
domestic trunk routes in late Jul-2012 with support from new part-owner Tiger Airways.
AirPhil, AirAsia Philippines, Cebu Pacific, SEAir and Zest will all
likely focus medium-term expansion on the international market,
particularly China and other north Asian destinations. “North Asia to me
is mecca,” Zest’s Mr Hogan tells CAPA. “I’m not excited by the domestic
market.”
Of all the international markets from the Philippines, China offers
the biggest potential opportunities as most other short-haul
international markets such as South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia are already well served by LCCs. (There are opportunities in Japan – which
is only served by one Philippine LCC, Cebu Pacific, with only one
destination – but all Philippine carriers have been barred by Japanese
authorities from adding capacity until the Philippines can pass an ICAO audit.)
Top five international markets from the Philippines based on capacity (seats per week): 10-Sep-2012 to 16-Sep-2012
Market | One-way seats per week |
---|---|
Hong Kong | 36,284 |
South Korea | 30,710 |
Singapore | 29,061 |
Japan | 21,364 |
China | 10,960 |
South Korea is already now the largest source of visitors to the
Philippines. There are currently just over 30,000 weekly one-way
scheduled seats between South Korea and the Philippines and during peak
periods there are up to 40,000 weekly seats. (Hong Kong is the largest
international market from the Philippines based on capacity but South
Korea is a larger source of visitors.)
There is also a huge charter market between the Philippines and
Korea. Most of the charter flights operate to and from Kalibo, which is
the closest international airport to the popular resort island of
Boracay (about 90 minutes by bus). Mr Hogan says Zest currently operates
32 charter flights per week to Korea and Korea accounts for 25% to 30%
of the carrier’s total business (Zest also currently operates 18 weekly
scheduled flights between Korea and the Philippines).
Charters to Korea help Philippine LCCs as well as PAL improve their
aircraft utilisation as the flights are almost always operated in the
middle of the night using A320s which are used primarily in the domestic
market. (LCCs also operate some international scheduled flights late at
night and early in the morning but these only utilise a small portion
of their fleets.)
PAL and the LCCs are keen to offer more scheduled flights to Korea
and China as scheduled flights are potentially more lucrative than
charters. While charters are low risk because the tour companies cover
the cost of the flights, the margins are typically low and the tour
companies are charging a lot more than LCCs would charge for the same
seat. For example while Zest will continue to look to grow its Korea
charter business, adjusting its model to accommodate the request of
Korean tour companies such as in-flight meals, it is also keen to expand
its scheduled operation into Korea and will launch a daily flight from Clark Airport outside Manila to Seoul Incheon in Oct-2012. The addition of Clark-Seoul will give Zest five scheduled routes to Korea along with Cebu, Manila and Kalibo to Seoul and Kalibo-Busan.
China could become the Philippines largest market
Philippine carriers believe the China market could eventually
overtake South Korea although it is now only one third the size. While
there are only two cities in Korea with scheduled service to the
Philippines, Busan and Seoul, there are dozens of Chinese airports that
can potentially support service to the Philippines. Chinese regional
airports are also seen as more aggressive in recruiting foreign LCCs
than airports in Korea or Japan.
Nearly all of China is within the range of narrowbody aircraft from
the Philippines, opening up opportunities in every region of the
fast-growing country. Mr Kingshott points out that the Philippines is
uniquely positioned to benefit from the expected boom in China outbound
tourism as the Philippines is the closest tropical destination to China.
For now however Philippine carriers have to be patient and wait for
the Philippine-China relations to improve before exploiting the huge
opportunities in the Chinese market. So far there have not been many
encouraging signs since the Scarborough Shoal conflict began in
Apr-2012. But Philippine carriers remain optimistic that the China
travel warning will be lifted sooner rather than later. Once it does,
rapid growth will almost certainly ensue and China could eventually
become the largest source of tourists for the Philippines.
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